North Coast Fisheries plans for organic farm fishing

If organic farming has taken off as a profitable, new food-oriented industry, why not organic fish farming? It’s a rhetorical question the group of University of Michigan students behind North Coast Fisheries would like to answer.MBA students Andrew Chamaj, Philip O’Niel, Aaron Skrocki and Matt Turner see a growing demand for fish around the world on a planet where pollution, over-fishing and invasive species are threatening aquatic populations and habitats.”We see this as a tremendous amount of opportunity around the world,” says Aaron Skrocki, CEO of North Coast Fisheries. He once worked for a fish raising firm and says he saw a pent-up demand for high-quality fish.The start-up plans to raise fish that are free of antibiotics, growth hormones and methyl mercury. This will provide fish native to the upper Midwest for both consumption at high-end restaurants and grocery stores, and also to stock ponds, lakes and other waterways. There is also potential for a side consulting business that specializes in fish raising and management.The firm hopes to secure land in Jackson County next year and begin operations in 2011-12. Source: Aaron Skrocki, CEO of North Coast FisheriesWriter: Jon Zemke

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

If organic farming has taken off as a profitable, new food-oriented industry, why not organic fish farming? It’s a rhetorical question the group of University of Michigan students behind North Coast Fisheries would like to answer.

MBA students Andrew Chamaj, Philip O’Niel, Aaron Skrocki and Matt Turner see a growing demand for fish around the world on a planet where pollution, over-fishing and invasive species are threatening aquatic populations and habitats.

“We see this as a tremendous amount of opportunity around the world,” says Aaron Skrocki, CEO of North Coast Fisheries. He once worked for a fish raising firm and says he saw a pent-up demand for high-quality fish.

The start-up plans to raise fish that are free of antibiotics, growth hormones and methyl mercury. This will provide fish native to the upper Midwest for both consumption at high-end restaurants and grocery stores, and also to stock ponds, lakes and other waterways. There is also potential for a side consulting business that specializes in fish raising and management.

The firm hopes to secure land in Jackson County next year and begin operations in 2011-12.

Source: Aaron Skrocki, CEO of North Coast Fisheries
Writer: Jon Zemke

Author

Our Partners

30044
30045
30046
30047
30049
Washtenaw ISD logo
Eastern Michigan University
Ann Arbor Art Center
UMS
U of M Arts Initiative
Engage EMU

Common Ground Is Brewing

Support local stories and receive our signature roast straight to your door when you join at the Standard level (or above).

Drink Better, Read Local

Close the CTA

Don't miss out!

Everything Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti, in your inbox every week.

Close the CTA

Already a subscriber? Enter your email to hide this popup in the future.